I AM CALLED BLACK
n’s eyes assumed t in pleasure. I praised ter at lengtfelt emotion, noohe blind.
oucrengto pass to me. I, again, t of Sed me at home.
Standing still t ime, pages opened before us, it y igued us t ing. e’d become embarrassed of eacher.
“ do?” he asked again.
I ain t tc, I turned my s and left, but kept my eyes trained attentively on Master Osman. as ruly blind or o convince t some untalented and incompetent old masters from So curry respect and to prevent otioning their failures.
“I o die here,” he said.
“My great master, my dear sir,” I fa on painting but on t, not on ters but on imitators of tand it brings tears to my eyes. Yet it is also your duty to protect your master illustrators from tell me, urist horse?”
“Olive.”
I o be surprised.
.
“But I’m also certain t Olive te or unfortunate Elegant Effendi,” Olive dre bound to ters, imately tyles of and ice genealogy stretco Samarkand. No ask me, ” ered trils in t Olive dreioned times a detail—ttaco a tree—can be preserved in memory for generations, passing from master to apprentice, and yet mig manifest on to ter or on account of ticular tastes and dear Olive, in ly from ters ever being able to forget it. t t te’s book is a cruel trick of Alla all of us taken ters of as our models? Just like turkmen illustrators for one ures, didn’t erpieces of ed pictures? e are all ted admirers. Nouris art is t of Biing t are to t, murder poor Elegant Effendi, o